Swaziland

Swaziland

Author: Alan R Booth

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2019-06-26

Total Pages: 162

ISBN-13: 100031376X

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This book describes the basis of Swazi traditional life and examines how modern values are influencing change. It focuses on Hilda Kuper's original study and subsequent analyses to describe that traditional society.


Swaziland

Swaziland

Author: Christian P. Potholm

Publisher: Univ of California Press

Published: 2023-04-28

Total Pages: 194

ISBN-13: 0520317327

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This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1972.


Geographers

Geographers

Author: Elizabeth Baigent

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2019-12-26

Total Pages: 249

ISBN-13: 1350127981

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Women are the exclusive focus of the 38th volume of Geographers. For the first time in the serial's history, the entire volume is devoted to important work of distinguished female geographers, amply demonstrating how these scholars' professional lives enrich the discipline's history. It also illustrates how reading and writing their biographies not only expands our understanding of geography's past, but points to its more diverse future. The collection includes biographies of Doreen Massey, winner of geography's 'Nobel prize', the prix Vautrin-Lud, for her remarkable contribution to geography and neighbouring disciplines which discovered the importance of space through her work; Helen Wallis, geographer and historian of cartography who for many years had charge of the UK's foremost collection of maps; Alice Saunier-Seïté, who applied her geographical training and formidable energy to teaching and educational reform in France; Isabel Margarida André, who lived through a turbulent political period in her native Portugal and meticulously investigated its effect on women and political geography; and the many women who helped to create the UK's first Geography department - the University of Oxford's, School of Geography - including Fanny Herbertson, Nora MacMunn, Marjorie Sweeting, Mary Marshall, Barbara Kennedy and other women geographers who are memorialised in a group article.


Geography and Imperialism, 1820-1940

Geography and Imperialism, 1820-1940

Author: Morag Bell

Publisher: Manchester University Press

Published: 1995

Total Pages: 360

ISBN-13: 9780719039348

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An examination of how European imperialism was facilitated and challenged from 1820 to 1920. With reference to geographical science, the authors add to multi-disciplinary debates on the complex cultural, ideological and intellectual bases of European imper